- History of Shropshire
This article relates the history of the county of Shropshire in
England .Shropshire was established during the division of SaxonMercia into shires in the 10th century and after theNorman Conquest experienced significant development, after the principal estates of the county were given to eminent Normans.The Coalbrookdale area of the county is designated "the birthplace of the
Industrial Revolution ", due to significant technological developments that happened there.Etymology
The origin of the name "Shropshire" is the Old English "Scrobbesbyrigscīr" (literally "Shrewsburyshire"), perhaps taking its name from
Richard Scrob (or FitzScrob orScrope ), the builder ofRichard's Castle near what is now the town ofLudlow . However, theNormans who ruled England after1066 found both "Scrobbesbyrig" and "Scrobbesbyrigscir" difficult to pronounce so they softened them to "Salopesberia" and "Salopescira". Salop is the abbreviation of these.When a council for the county was set up in 1888, it was called "Salop County Council". The name was never popular, with local MP
Jasper More raising an amendment to the 1972 Local Government Bill to rename the county "Shropshire" [cite hansard|house=House of Commons|date=6 July 1972|column_start=958|column_end=963] - at the time the council itself opposed the change, although later, in 1980, would exercise its power to legally change the name of the county."The Times" noted in a
February 19 ,1980 article about the name change that "there was no record of why the name Salop County Council was adopted". The decision to make the change was taken onMarch 1 ,1980 , at a special meeting of the council, with 48 votes in favour versus five against. It came into effect on April 1. [Salop likely to be Shropshire from April 1. The Times. February 19, 1980] [A Shropshire lad wins campaign to drop 'Salop'. The Times. March 3, 1980]The term "Salopian", derived from "Salop", is still used to mean "from Shropshire". Salop can also mean the county town,
Shrewsbury , and in historical recordsShropshire is described as "the county of Salop" and Shrewsbury as "the town of Salop". There is a reference in the encyclopaedia Britannica (1948) to Shropshire being called Sloppesbury, and this name being shortened to Salop.The Latin motto of "Floreat Salopia" (may Shropshire flourish) was originally used by the borough of Shrewsbury, and was adopted in 1896 by Salop (or Shropshire) County Council when they received a grant of a
coat of arms . The motto is now used in a number of other emblems associated with the county.Another reason why Salop was unfavourable was the fact that if you add the letter 'E' and make it Salope, this is a French word and means 'Bitch or Loose Woman'.
County extent
The border with Wales was defined in the
16th century - the hundreds of Oswestry (includingOswestry ) and Pimhill (includingWem ), and part ofChirbury had prior to theLaws in Wales Act formed various Lordships in theWelsh Marches .The present day ceremonial county boundary is almost the same as the historic county's. Notably there has been the removal of several
exclave s andenclave s. The largest of the exclaves wasHalesowen , which became part of Worcestershire in1844 (now part of the West Midlands county), and the largest of the enclaves was Herefordshire's Farlow in South Shropshire, also transferred in 1844, to Shropshire. Alterations have been made on Shropshire's border with all neighbouring English counties over the centuries. Gains have been made to the south of Ludlow (from Herefordshire), to the north of Shifnal (from Staffordshire) and to the north (from Cheshire) and south (from Staffordshire) of Market Drayton. The county has lost land in two places - to Staffordshire and Worcestershire. [ [http://www.visionofbritain.org.uk/bound_map_page.jsp?first=true&u_id=10210367&c_id=10001043 Vision of Britain] - Ancient county boundaries] [ [http://www.abcounties.co.uk/ABC_PR_Shropshire_Nov07.pdf Association of British Counties] - Shropshire's historic and modern boundaries]Before the Norman Conquest of 1066
The Saxon Kingdom of Mercia
The district which is now Shropshire was annexed to the Saxon Kingdom of
Mercia by KingOffa , who in765 constructedWatt's Dyke to defend his territory against the Welsh, and in779 , having pushed across theRiver Severn , drove the Welsh King ofPowys fromShrewsbury , then known asPengwerne , and secured his conquests by a second defensive earthwork known asOffa's Dyke , which, entering Shropshire at Knighton, traverses moor and mountain byLlanymynech andOswestry , in many places forming the boundary line of the county, and finally leaves it atBron y Garth and entersDenbighshire .Danish invasions
In the 9th and 10th centuries the district was frequently overrun by the
Danes , who in 874 destroyed the famous priory of Wenlock, said to have been founded by St Milburga, granddaughter of KingPenda of Mercia , and in 896 wintered atQuatford . In 912Ethelfleda , the Lady of Mercia, erected a fortress atBridgnorth against the Danish invaders, and in the following year she erected another atChirbury .The establishment of Shropshire
Mercia was mapped out into
shire s in the 10th century after its recovery from the Danes byEdward the Elder . The first mention of 'Shropshire' in theAnglo-Saxon Chronicle occurs under 1006, when the King crossed theThames and wintered there. In 1016Edmund Atheling plunderedShrewsbury and the neighbourhood.1066 to the late Middle Ages
The Norman Conquest
After the
Norman Conquest of 1066 the principal estates inShropshire were all bestowed on Norman proprietors, pre-eminent among whom isRoger de Montgomerie, 1st Earl of Shrewsbury , whose son Robert de Bellesme forfeited his possessions for rebelling against Henry I, when the latter bestowed the Earldom on his Queen for life.Forests
At this period a very large portion of Shropshire was covered by forests, the largest of which,
Worf Forest , at its origin extended at least 8 miles in length and 6 miles in width, and became a favorite hunting-ground of the English Kings. The forest ofWrekin , or 'Mount Gilbert' as it was then called, covered the whole of that hill and extended eastward as far asSheriffhales . Other forests wereStiperstones , the jurisdiction of which was from time immemorial annexed to the barony of Caus, Wyre, Shirlot, Clee, Long Forest and Brewood.Castles
The constant necessity of defending their territories against the Welsh prompted the Norman lords of Shropshire to such activity in castle-building that out of 186 castles in England no less than 32 are in this county. Shropshire became a key area within the
Welsh Marches . Of the castles built in this period the most famous areLudlow , founded byRoger de Montgomery ;Bishop's Castle , which belonged to the Bishops ofHereford ;Clun Castle , built by theFitzAlans ;Cleobury Castle , built byHugh de Mortimer ;Caus Castle , once the Barony ofPeter Corbett , from whom it came to the Barons Strafford;Rowton Castle , also a seat of the Corbetts; Red Castle, a seat of the Audleys. Other castles wereBridgnorth ,Corfham ,Holgate ,Pulverbatch ,Quatford , Shrewsbury andWem .Battle of Shrewsbury
In 1403, Shrewsbury was the site of a battle between the Lancastrian King Henry IV, and Henry Percy ('Harry Hotspur') of Northumberland. The
Battle of Shrewsbury , was fought on July 21, 1403, at what is now Battlefield , just to the north of present day Shrewsbury town. The battle resulted in the death of Henry Percy, and a victory to King Henry IV, who established a chapel at the site to commemorate the fallen.Religious foundations
Among the Norman religious foundations were:
*the
Cluniac priory atMuch Wenlock , re-established on the Saxon foundation byRoger Montgomery in 1080
*theAugustinian Haughmond Abbey founded byWilliam Fitz-Alan
*theCistercian Buildwas Abbey , now a magnificent ruin, founded in 1135 byRoger de Clinton ,Bishop of Chester
*Shrewsbury Abbey , founded in 1083 by Roger de Montgomerie
*the Augustinian abbey ofLilleshall , founded in the reign of Stephen
*the Augustinian priory ofWombridge , founded before the reign of King Henry I
*theBenedictine priory ofAlberbury founded byFulk FitzWarin in the 13th century
*andChirbury Priory founded in the 13th century.Hundreds
The fifteen Shropshire hundreds mentioned in the
Domesday Survey were entirely rearranged in the reign of King Henry I, and only Overs andCondover retained their original names. The Domesday hundred of Ruesset was replaced by Ford, and the hundred court transferred fromAlberbury to Ford.Hodnet was the meeting-place of the Domesday hundred of Odenet, which was combined with Recordin, the largest of the Domesday hundreds, to form the modern hundred of Bradford, the latter also including part of the Domesday hundred of Pinholle inStaffordshire . The hundred of Baschurch had its meeting-place at Baschurch in the time of Edward the Confessor; in the reign of Henry I. it was represented mainly by the hundred of Pimhill, the meeting-place of which was atPimhill .Oswestry represents the Domesday hundred of Mercete, the hundred court of which was transferred fromMaesbury to Oswestry. Munslow hundred was formed in the reign of, but in the reign of Richard I a large portion was taken out of it to form a new liberty for the priory of Wenlock, the limits of which correspond very nearly with the modern franchise of Wenlock. The Domesday hundred of Alnodestreu, abolished in the reign of King Henry I, had its meeting-place at Membrefeld (Morville).Administration
Shropshire was administered by a
sheriff , at least from the time of the Norman Conquest, the first Norman sheriff beingWarin the Bald , whose successor wasRainald , and in 1156 the office was held byWilliam Fitzalan , whose account of thefee farm of the county is entered in thepipe roll for that year. The shire court was held atShrewsbury . A considerable portion of Shropshire was included in theWelsh Marches , the court for the administration of which was held atLudlow . In 1397 the castle ofOswestry with the hundred and eleven towns pertaining thereto, the castle of Isabel with the lordship pertaining thereto, and the castle of Dalaley, were annexed to the principality ofChester . By the statute of 1535 for the abolition of theWelsh Marches , the lordships of Oswestry, Whittington,Masbroke andKnockin were formed into the hundred of Oswestry; the lordship of Ellesmere was joined to the hundred ofPimhill ; and the lordship of Down to the hundred ofChirbury . The boundaries of Shropshire have otherwise varied little since theDomesday Survey.Richard's Castle , Ludford, andLudlow , however, were then included in theHerefordshire hundred of Cutestornes, while several manors now inHerefordshire were assessed underShropshire . The Shropshire manors of Kings Nordley, Alveley, Claverley and Worfield were assessed in the Domesday hundred of Saisdon inStaffordshire ; and Quatt, Romsley, Rudge and Shipley in theWarwickshire hundred of Stanlei. By statute 34 and 35 Henry VIII, the town and hundred ofAberton , till then part ofMerionethshire , were annexed to this county.Ecclesiastical organisation
Shropshire in the 13th century was situated almost entirely in the
diocese of Hereford anddiocese of Coventry and Lichfield ; and formed anarchdeacon ry called the archdeaconry ofSalop . That portion of the archdeaconry in the Hereford diocese included the deaneries ofBurford ,Stottesdon ,Ludlow ,Pontesbury ,Clun andWenlock ; and that portion in the Coventry and Lichfield diocese the deaneries ofSalop and Newport.In 1535 the Hereford portion included the additional deanery of
Bridgnorth ; it now forms the archdeaconry of Ludlow, with the additional deaneries of Montgomery, Bishops Castle,Condover , and Church Stretton. The archdeaconry of Salop, now entirely in the Lichfield diocese, includes the deaneries of Edgmond, Ellesmere, Hodnet,Shifnal ,Shrewsbury ,Wem , Whitchurch and Wrockwardine. Part of Welsh Shropshire was included in thediocese of St Asaph until thedisestablishment of the Church in Wales (1920), comprising the deanery ofOswestry in the archdeaconry of Montgomery, and twoparish es in the deanery ofLlangollen and the archdeaconry ofWrexham . Certain parishes inMontgomeryshire chose to remain in the diocese ofHereford .The Industrial Revolution
Coalbrookdale , a small area of Shropshire has become designated the birthplace of theIndustrial Revolution , because good coking coal was found there in the eighteenth century which gave the Darby foundries the edge over rivals in the smelting of iron ore - its product at first being much purer than that smelted in other areas, where iron production was also taking place. The reason good coking coal was found in the area, however, is mainly due to Shropshire's diversegeology . And shallow drift mines made it easy to extract.Shropshire is the "geological capital" of the UK, as just about every rock type in Northern Europe is found within its borders, as are
coal ,lead ,copper andiron ore deposits. In addition to this, theRiver Severn flows through the county and has been used for the transportation of goods and services for centuries. A result of this was that theIronbridge Gorge became a focal point of new industrial energies in the18th Century .The towns of
Broseley and Madeley were centres of innovation during the late 18th Century. InBroseley ,John Wilkinson pioneered precision engineering by constructing Boulton and Watt's original steam engines, and by boring cannons with greater accuracy and range. He also constructed the first iron boat. It was in nearby locations where key events of theIndustrial Revolution took place.Coalbrookdale is where moderniron smelting techniques were developed,Ironbridge is where the world's first iron bridge was constructed, to linkBroseley withMadeley and theBlack Country , andDitherington is where the world's first iron framed building was built, theDitherington Flaxmill . Other places notable for early industry areJackfield andCoalport .Later,
Broseley andMadeley became notable for their continuation of trade in the field of bricks and tiles, which became a stable to the booming building trade, and millions ofBroseley clay pipes were exported across the British Empire.References
*1911
External links
* [http://www.british-history.ac.uk/catalogue.asp?type=false&gid=28 Victoria County History for Shropshire] : full-text versions of several volumes, on British History Online.
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